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BEHAVIOR LESSON PLANS
AcknowledgementsPortions of this presentation were
adapted from work and presentations by the following:
Illinois PBIS Network training materials and curricula
Tim Lewis, Ph.D., University of Missouri
Marla Dewhirst, Technical Assistance Director
Illinois PBIS Network
Kelly Davis, KYCID/KY PBIS Network
www.pbis.org
Guiding Principles of PBIS
If many students are making the same
mistake, consider changing system….not
punishing students
Start by teaching, monitoring, & rewarding…
before increasing punishment
We all Have Baggage….
• Poverty• Language barriers• Little parent interaction• Inconsistent discipline• Little or no monitoring• Lack of pro-social community
engagement
Students may come with some heavy baggage:
Why Teach Behavior?
• Can’t ‘make’ students behave
• Can create an environment that increases likelihood
• Guided by core curriculum• Implemented consistently, with
fidelity
“If a child doesn’t know how to read, we teach.”
“If a child doesn’t know how to swim, we teach.”
“If a child doesn’t know how to multiply, we teach.”
“If a child doesn’t know how to drive, we teach.”
“If a child doesn’t know how to behave, we… …teach? …punish?”
“Why can’t we finish the last sentence as automatically as we do the others?”
John Herner, Former President NASDSE, 1998
Repetition is Key
For a child to learn something new, it needs to be repeated on average 8 times
For a child to unlearn an old behavior and replace it with a new behavior, the new behavior must be repeated on average 28 times
-Harry Wong
When Do We Teach Behavior?
• At beginning of the year kickoff • When data show a problem • Weekly or daily – teaching, re-
teaching• Proactively – before class/activity• Spontaneously - ‘teaching
moments’
What are Behavior Lesson Plans?
• Structure for teaching expected behaviors
Teach Behavior Like You Teach Academics
DEFINESimply
MODEL
PRACTICEIn Setting
ADJUST forEfficiency
MONITOR &ACKNOWLEDGE
Continuously
Components of a Behavior Lesson Plan
• Purpose for lesson• Non-examples and Examples • Modeling• Role playing – students practice skill• Reinforcement • Acknowledgment
Designing a Behavior Lesson Plan
Select the skill to be taught
• Skills are taken directly from the behavioral matrix
• Select skills based on the trends in your data
Writing a Behavior Lesson Plan
• Name the skill • Align to school-wide expectation• Introduce rule/skill• Demonstrate rule/skill• Teacher first• Students can role play
• Provide feedback • Acknowledge
Examples Onlinehttp://charactercounts.org/lesson-plans/lesson_planes_sr.php?age_group=6-9%20yrs.
http://pbiscompendium.ssd.k12.mo.us/LessonPlans/ElementaryMatrix.htm(bunch of lesson plans for elementary)http://pbiscompendium.ssd.k12.mo.us/LessonPlans/MiddleMatrix.htm(bunch of lesson plans for middle school)http://coedpages.uncc.edu/bric/behavior%20lesson%20plans.pdf
http://www4.smsd.org/positivebehaviorsupports/html31169.htm
From Louisiana:http://stage.redstick.com/content_lasig/media/Lesson_Plans.pdf
Example - Discussion
• How can you improve it?
• How can you apply it to your own school?
Expectation:
Skill Context
Introduction & Rationale
Teacher Model
Role-PlayExample:Nonexample:Example:Student Example:
Signal
Review
Practice throughout the Day
Homework
Supplemental Activities
Practice
PURPOSE OF THE LESSON/WHY IS IT IMPORTANT.
1. 2.
Behavior Lesson Plan Template
UNIVERSAL EXPECTATION:_______________________________
NAME OF SKILL/SETTING:________________________________
What do the data show? (Who, what, where, when, how often, why is it continuing?)
Practice, cont.
TEACHING EXAMPLES
1. 2. 3.
How can you model non-examples and examples?
How will you know if students understand?
Practice, cont.
STUDENT ACTIVITES/ROLE PLAYS
1. 2. 3.
What types of activities can the students do to model the behavior?
Practice, cont.
FOLLOW UP/ REINFORCEMENT ACTIVITES
1. 2. 3.
How will you encourage students to continue using the behavior?
How will you acknowledge students for using the behavior?
Planning for Teaching Behavior: Guiding Questions
• How will expectations be taught? • What is teaching schedule (dates, times)
for year?• Who is responsible for teaching
expectations? • Who is responsible for writing behavioral
lesson plans based on data trends?
Tips for Creating Lessons
Build on what you already have (e.g., character education)
Involve staff and students in the development process
Tips for Teaching Behavior
• Pre-correct before activity • Have a plan for behavioral acting-
out• Practice conducted in actual setting• Use non-example and example• Use high frequency
acknowledgments• Use a variety of strategies:• Written • Graphic• Modeling• Videos
More Ideas• Have students create skits.• Have students write letters to their
parents or articles for the school newspaper about expectations.
• Play “Pictionary” or “Jeopardy” with expectations.
• Use older students to show younger students
Questions?
Stay in Touch!Our Website:
http://cce.astate.edu/pbis
Like us on Facebook at:
http://www.facebook.com/asucce
Follow us on Twitter at:
https://twitter.com/ASUCCE
Resources
http://cce.astate.edu/pbis/www.pbis.orgwww.pbisillinois.org